New hepatitis B virus of cranes that has an unexpected broad host range.

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New hepatitis B virus of cranes that has an unexpected broad host range. / Prassolov, Alexej; Hohenberg, Heinz; Kalinina, Tatyana; Schneider, Carola; Cova, Lucyna; Krone, Oliver; Frölich, Kai; Will, Hans; Sirma, Hüseyin.

in: J VIROL, Jahrgang 77, Nr. 3, 3, 2003, S. 1964-1976.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Prassolov, A, Hohenberg, H, Kalinina, T, Schneider, C, Cova, L, Krone, O, Frölich, K, Will, H & Sirma, H 2003, 'New hepatitis B virus of cranes that has an unexpected broad host range.', J VIROL, Jg. 77, Nr. 3, 3, S. 1964-1976. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12525630?dopt=Citation>

APA

Prassolov, A., Hohenberg, H., Kalinina, T., Schneider, C., Cova, L., Krone, O., Frölich, K., Will, H., & Sirma, H. (2003). New hepatitis B virus of cranes that has an unexpected broad host range. J VIROL, 77(3), 1964-1976. [3]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12525630?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Prassolov A, Hohenberg H, Kalinina T, Schneider C, Cova L, Krone O et al. New hepatitis B virus of cranes that has an unexpected broad host range. J VIROL. 2003;77(3):1964-1976. 3.

Bibtex

@article{46fac80139be42c4938419fb3f5f3ef8,
title = "New hepatitis B virus of cranes that has an unexpected broad host range.",
abstract = "All hepadnaviruses known so far have a very limited host range, restricted to their natural hosts and a few closely related species. This is thought to be due mainly to sequence divergence in the large envelope protein and species-specific differences in host components essential for virus propagation. Here we report an infection of cranes with a novel hepadnavirus, designated CHBV, that has an unexpectedly broad host range and is only distantly evolutionarily related to avihepadnaviruses of related hosts. Direct DNA sequencing of amplified CHBV DNA as well a sequencing of cloned viral genomes revealed that CHBV is most closely related to, although distinct from, Ross' goose hepatitis B virus (RGHBV) and slightly less closely related to duck hepatitis B virus (DHBV). Phylogenetically, cranes are very distant from geese and ducks and are most closely related to herons and storks. Naturally occurring hepadnaviruses in the last two species are highly divergent in sequence from RGHBV and DHBV and do not infect ducks or do so only marginally. In contrast, CHBV from crane sera and recombinant CHBV produced from LMH cells infected primary duck hepatocytes almost as efficiently as DHBV did. This is the first report of a rather broad host range of an avihepadnavirus. Our data imply either usage of similar or identical entry pathways and receptors by DHBV and CHBV, unusual host and virus adaptation mechanisms, or divergent evolution of the host genomes and cellular components required for virus propagation.",
author = "Alexej Prassolov and Heinz Hohenberg and Tatyana Kalinina and Carola Schneider and Lucyna Cova and Oliver Krone and Kai Fr{\"o}lich and Hans Will and H{\"u}seyin Sirma",
year = "2003",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "77",
pages = "1964--1976",
journal = "J VIROL",
issn = "0022-538X",
publisher = "American Society for Microbiology",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - New hepatitis B virus of cranes that has an unexpected broad host range.

AU - Prassolov, Alexej

AU - Hohenberg, Heinz

AU - Kalinina, Tatyana

AU - Schneider, Carola

AU - Cova, Lucyna

AU - Krone, Oliver

AU - Frölich, Kai

AU - Will, Hans

AU - Sirma, Hüseyin

PY - 2003

Y1 - 2003

N2 - All hepadnaviruses known so far have a very limited host range, restricted to their natural hosts and a few closely related species. This is thought to be due mainly to sequence divergence in the large envelope protein and species-specific differences in host components essential for virus propagation. Here we report an infection of cranes with a novel hepadnavirus, designated CHBV, that has an unexpectedly broad host range and is only distantly evolutionarily related to avihepadnaviruses of related hosts. Direct DNA sequencing of amplified CHBV DNA as well a sequencing of cloned viral genomes revealed that CHBV is most closely related to, although distinct from, Ross' goose hepatitis B virus (RGHBV) and slightly less closely related to duck hepatitis B virus (DHBV). Phylogenetically, cranes are very distant from geese and ducks and are most closely related to herons and storks. Naturally occurring hepadnaviruses in the last two species are highly divergent in sequence from RGHBV and DHBV and do not infect ducks or do so only marginally. In contrast, CHBV from crane sera and recombinant CHBV produced from LMH cells infected primary duck hepatocytes almost as efficiently as DHBV did. This is the first report of a rather broad host range of an avihepadnavirus. Our data imply either usage of similar or identical entry pathways and receptors by DHBV and CHBV, unusual host and virus adaptation mechanisms, or divergent evolution of the host genomes and cellular components required for virus propagation.

AB - All hepadnaviruses known so far have a very limited host range, restricted to their natural hosts and a few closely related species. This is thought to be due mainly to sequence divergence in the large envelope protein and species-specific differences in host components essential for virus propagation. Here we report an infection of cranes with a novel hepadnavirus, designated CHBV, that has an unexpectedly broad host range and is only distantly evolutionarily related to avihepadnaviruses of related hosts. Direct DNA sequencing of amplified CHBV DNA as well a sequencing of cloned viral genomes revealed that CHBV is most closely related to, although distinct from, Ross' goose hepatitis B virus (RGHBV) and slightly less closely related to duck hepatitis B virus (DHBV). Phylogenetically, cranes are very distant from geese and ducks and are most closely related to herons and storks. Naturally occurring hepadnaviruses in the last two species are highly divergent in sequence from RGHBV and DHBV and do not infect ducks or do so only marginally. In contrast, CHBV from crane sera and recombinant CHBV produced from LMH cells infected primary duck hepatocytes almost as efficiently as DHBV did. This is the first report of a rather broad host range of an avihepadnavirus. Our data imply either usage of similar or identical entry pathways and receptors by DHBV and CHBV, unusual host and virus adaptation mechanisms, or divergent evolution of the host genomes and cellular components required for virus propagation.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 77

SP - 1964

EP - 1976

JO - J VIROL

JF - J VIROL

SN - 0022-538X

IS - 3

M1 - 3

ER -